The Department of Defense announced today the
death of five soldiers who were supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.
They died May 30, 2007, in Upper Sangin Valley, Afghanistan, when their
helicopter crashed apparently due to enemy fire. They were assigned to
the 3rd General Support Aviation Battalion, 82nd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd
Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

For more information related to this release
the media may contact the 82nd Airborne Division public affairs office
at (910) 432-0661; after hours (910) 303-0691.

7 June 2007:

A former Carson City, Nevada, man was among
five 82d Airborne soldiers killed when their helicopter crashed in Afghanistan
last week, his aunt said Monday.

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Joshua Rodgers, 29,
was killed Wednesday when the Ch-47 Chinook he was co-piloting was apparently
shot down by enemy fire in the Upper Sangin Valley in Afghanistan, said
Major Tom Earnhardt. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the crash.

A member of the 3rd General Support Aviation
Battalion, 82nd Brigade Combat Team, Rodgers was stationed in Fort Bragg,
North Carolina, where he lived with his wife, Casey Gilder Rodgers, of
Gardnerville, and their three daughters ages 2, 3 and 7, said maternal
aunt Susan McElfish of Carson City.

The CH-47 Chinook helicopter went down
Wednesday in southern Afghanistan's Helmand Province, killing the five
American soldiers and two others on board - a Briton and a Canadian.

Shortly before the crash, the twin-rotor helicopter
had dropped off at least 30 paratroopers from the 82nd in an air assault
on a Taliban position.

The U.S. soldiers were assigned to Combined
Joint Task Force-82.

Rodgers deployed to Afghanistan in January
and had previously served a year in Iraq, said McElfish.

She said her nephew, the only child of her
younger sister Deborah Walker, graduated from Douglas High School in 1997.
He attended his freshman year at Carson High in 1994.

He and his wife, Casey, were married in 1997
at the Trinity Lutheran Church in Gardnerville, according to Carson City
Marriage Bureau records.

"It would have been their 10th anniversary
in October," McElfish said.

Rodgers joined the Army after high school,
served four years as an enlisted infantryman, then moved back to the area
and worked as a corrections officer for two years.

According to the Nevada Department of Corrections,
Rodgers was employed as a correction officer trainee in August 2000. He
then worked as a permanent corrections officer from August 2001 to February
2003.

After that, he reenlisted in the Army and became
a warrant officer.

Upon hearing the news, Deborah Walker and her
husband, Ben Walker, of Carson City, immediately went to North Carolina
to be with Casey and the children, McElfish said.

"Joshua was a wonderful husband and son. He
was our hero. He was faithful to his country. He was an American," she
said through tears. "He was devoted to his family. Family was everything
to Joshua."

In honor of Rodgers, flags at the Nevada State
Capitol were flown at half-staff on Monday.

Nevada Congressman Dean Heller also offered
his condolences to the family.

"May has been a difficult month for Nevadans.
Some of our best and brightest have been lost fighting for our country.
I am saddened by the most recent news of Joshua Rodgers' death. His passing
is a loss not only for his family and friends, but for our country and
our state," Heller said.

McElfish said funeral arrangements have not
yet been made, but that her nephew will be brought back to Nevada.